Journal of Translational Medicine (Aug 2024)

C188-9 reduces patient-specific primary breast cancer cells proliferation at the low, clinic-relevant concentration

  • Rongji Zheng,
  • Tian Guan,
  • Chaoqun Hong,
  • Yao Yao,
  • Yutong Fang,
  • Wei Huang,
  • Chunfa Chen,
  • Huancheng Zeng,
  • Jiman Huang,
  • Hui Lin,
  • Bingfeng Chen,
  • Rendong Zhang,
  • Dongmei Chen,
  • Zhechun Ding,
  • Haoyu Zeng,
  • Jundong Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-024-05542-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives STAT3 is a transcriptional activator of breast cancer oncogenes, suggesting that it could be a potential therapeutic target for breast cancer. Therefore, this study investigated the potential application of C188-9, a STAT3 signal pathway inhibitor, in the treatment of breast cancer through a novel pre-clinical platform with patient-specific primary cells (PSPCs). Methods PSPCs were isolated from breast cancer samples obtained via biopsy or surgery from fifteen patient donors with their full acknowledgements. PSPCs were treated with C188-9 or other chemotherapeutic agents, and then analyzed with cell viability assay. Western blot assay and real-time quantitative PCR were also used to determine the expression and activity of STAT3 signaling pathway of corresponding PSPCs. Results C188-9 treatment at normal (experimental) concentration had valid inhibition on PSPCs proliferation. Meanwhile, treatment at a low (clinic-relevant) concentration of C188-9 for an extended period reduced cell viability of PSPCs still more than some of other traditional chemotherapy drugs. In addition, C188-9 decreased expression level of pSTAT3 in PSPCs from some, but not all patient samples. The treatment of C188-9 reduced cell viability of the breast cancer samples through inhibiting the STAT3 to C-myc signaling pathway. Conclusions In this study, we tested a novel drug C188-9 at a low, clinic-relevant concentration, together with several traditional chemotherapy agents. PSPCs from ten out of fifteen patient donors were sensitive to C188-9, while some of traditional chemotherapy agents failed. This finding suggested that C188-9 could have treatment effects only on those ten PSPC patient donors, indicating the future personalized utilization of PSPCs.

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